Doing
MEDIA WORK
- ESTABLISH
YOUR GOALS
Before embarking on a media campaign, clearly articulate your
desired goals. The goals drive press efforts—not the other
way around. Everything you do in the media is designed to help
you attain your goals. The goals should also be realistic.
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- TARGET
YOUR AUDIENCE
Any public relations effort must target your audience. This is
one of the first tasks you must you must tackle in order to make
news. Who are you trying to reach? You may have several target
audiences who need to receive your message, or you may have one
specific audience. The targeted audience will help determine the
scope of your media plan. Give your audience some thought before
embarking on a media campaign. This is good strategic planning.
The target group for your message may include:
Lawmakers, Voters, Women, Community leader, People of color, People
of faith.
- PLAN
YOUR MEDIA for your
desired audience. Why waste resources on a media plan that will
not reach your targeted audience? If home mechanics are a target
audience, pitch your story to the "Home" section of
the local newspaper to the "handy home tips" local radio
show. If local residents are important, aim for the "Metro"
section of the paper and community press, including ethnic media
that may serve affected neighborhoods. Aiming for local politicians?
Then stage a media event on the steps of City Hall or your state
capitol.
- IDENTIFY
YOUR NEWS
Do not waste reporters' time with something that is not news.
What reports, surveys or briefing papers can you produce and release
that will provide a new perspective? What media events that communicate
real news can you stage? What information can you provide that
will present a different twist to the story?
NEWS HOOKS
To really grab a reporter's attention,
your story must be newsworthy. This list of news hooks can spice
up your story and help you score press. Which of these hooks apply
to your story?
CONTROVERSY sells stories. Frame the controversy to put the opposition
on the defense.
DRAMATIC
HUMAN INTEREST. Include the
stories of real people, their triumphs, tragedies, adventures and
anecdotes.
TRENDS. Stories that suggest new opinions, behavior patterns and
attitudes. Three is a trend; find at least 3 examples to assert
that a new trend is emerging.
TIMELINES/CALENDAR. Captures something coming up on the calendar. “Back
to school” can be a hook for toxic pollution in your children’s
schools. Mother’s Day can be a hook for a new breast cancer
community hot line.
NEW
ANNOUNCEMENT. ìUnprecedentedî
or ìgroundbreakingî or ìfirst-everî. Reporters are only interested
in new news, not old news. Make your news fresh.
LOCALIZE
NATIONAL STORY (and vice versa).
Take a nationally breaking story and emphasize its local impact,
ie, how a welfare reform bill is affecting people living in your
community.
ANNIVERSARIES/MILESTONES. One year later, one decade later.
FRESH
ANGLE ON OLD STORY. Take an
old story and put a fresh twist on it.
PROFILES
AND PERSONNEL may feature individuals,
community leaders, or galvanizing spokespersons who may become news
themselves because of their fascinating stories.
SPECIAL
EVENT. A huge conference, rally
or gathering. Frame event to capture the issue and importance.
RESPOND
AND REACT to news others have
made.
CELEBRITY. If you have a nationally known celebrity on your side, make
sure they are included in the story.
STRANGE
BEDFELLOWS. Have unlikely allies
come together in solidarity over your issue? Highlight it in your
story.
5. FRAME THE ISSUE
For maximum media impact. Do you always find yourself on the defense
with your opposition framing the news instead of you framing it?
The news is not just about your group or your report. It is about
something much bigger, with more drama, that will impact more people
at a timely moment.
6. CRAFT YOUR MEDIA MESSAGES
Condense your complicated issue down to two or three main messages.
Discipline the messages.
7. CREATE A MEDIA PLAN
Your plan will have several components, including everything from
identifying and pitching reporters, to placing op-eds, to staging
media events. A coordinated media plan will increase your success
in moving your messages and having them "echoed" through
the media.
ELEMENTS
OF A MEDIA PLAN
Identify
issue
Establish goals
Target audience
Frame issue
Create key messages
Produce deliverables (press kit, report, etc.)
Prioritize media database (reporters)
Note:
These strategy-intensive elements of the media plan are what you
do before you even call a reporter or stage a media event. Once
you do these, it is time to unleash the other components of your
media plan.
Write
and distribute media advisories/press releases
Conduct media briefings
Pitch reporters
Stage media events
Write and place op eds
Book radio and TV talk shows
Write and place letters to the Editor
Produce and place radio actualities
Coordinate efforts on web site
Track coverage